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This paper offers an African perspective on moral status grounded on an understanding of personhood. These concepts are key to understanding the differences in emphasis and the values at play when global ethical issues are analysed within the African context. Drawing from African philosophical reflections on the descriptive and normative concepts of personhood, I propose a dual notion of subject and object moral status. I explain how object moral status, duties owed to persons, is differently grounded with respect to subject moral status, which refers to communally directed agency. This distinction influences the African way of conceptualising and addressing ethical issues, where, without ignoring rights of persons, moral consideration about the agency of right bearers is often factored into ethical deliberation. As a practical example, I look at the debate surrounding legal access to safe abortion on the African continent. I suggest a Gadamerian approach to diffuse the tensions that sometimes arise between universalist advocates of rights and cultural decolonisationists.

Original publication

DOI

10.1136/medhum-2021-012229

Type

Journal

Medical humanities

Publication Date

06/2022

Volume

48

Pages

238 - 245

Addresses

Philosophy and Classics, University of Ghana, Accra, Ghana atuire.ca@gmail.com.

Keywords

Humans, Morals, Pregnancy, Bioethical Issues, Bioethics, Moral Obligations, Personhood, Female, Moral Status